Calendar
- 6MarRevolution: Imagined Futures, Remembered PastsJoin The History Graduate Association for their 8th Annunal Conference: "Revolution: Imagined Futures, Remembered Pasts"...
- 6MarA Conversation with Iphigenia Kanara, Consul General of Greece in New York Discuss all things Greek and Greek-American with Iphigenia Kanara, Consul General of Greece in NY. Presented by The Center for Hellenic Stud...
- 6MarContemporary Chamber PlayersCome hear the Stony Brook Contemporary Chamber Players perform two virtuostic concerts! Free admissions...
- 7MarCycles of Clay: The Ceramic Narratives of Sunkoo Yuh Exhibition Opening ReceptionCycles of Clay explores the profound creativity of Sunkoo Yuh, an artist who navigates the intersections of cultural heritage and contempora...
News & Announcements
Research Spotlight
Do Signals in the Brain Control Our Taste Preferences?
Studies in humans suggest that the preference for certain foods influences how much we eat and that decreased sensitivity to taste is often associated with overconsumption, which may lead to obesity.
SBU researchers, including Arianna Maffei, professor in the Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, used genetic manipulation
in a laboratory brain model to demonstrate that neurosteroids, signals involved in
mood regulation and stress, can reduce the sensitivity and preference for sweet tastes
when elevated within the gustatory cortex — a region in the brain most involved with
taste. Their findings are published in
Current Biology.
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